[HTML][HTML] Granulocytes in ocular HSV-1 infection: opposing roles of mast cells and neutrophils

DJ Royer, M Zheng, CD Conrady… - … ophthalmology & visual …, 2015 - tvst.arvojournals.org
DJ Royer, M Zheng, CD Conrady, DJJ Carr
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2015tvst.arvojournals.org
Purpose.: The contributions of mast cells (MCs) to immunologic defense against pathogens
in the eye are unknown. We have characterized pericorneal MCs as tissue-resident innate
sentinels and determined their impact on the immune response to herpes simplex virus type-
1 (HSV-1), a common ocular pathogen. Methods.: The impact of mast cells on the immune
response to HSV-1 infection was investigated using MC-deficient Kit W-sh mice. Virus titers,
inflammatory cytokine production, eicosanoid profiles, cellular immune responses, and …
Abstract
Purpose.: The contributions of mast cells (MCs) to immunologic defense against pathogens in the eye are unknown. We have characterized pericorneal MCs as tissue-resident innate sentinels and determined their impact on the immune response to herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1), a common ocular pathogen.
Methods.: The impact of mast cells on the immune response to HSV-1 infection was investigated using MC-deficient Kit W-sh mice. Virus titers, inflammatory cytokine production, eicosanoid profiles, cellular immune responses, and ocular pathology were evaluated and compared with C57BL/6J mice during an acute corneal HSV-1 infection.
Results.: Corneas of Kit W-sh mice have higher viral titers, increased edema, and greater leukocyte infiltration following HSV-1 infection. Following infection, cytokine profiles were slightly elevated overall in Kit W-sh mice. Eicosanoid profiles were remarkably different only when comparing uninfected corneas from both groups. Neutrophils within infected corneas expressed HSV-1 antigen, lytic genes, and served as a disease-causing vector when adoptively transferred into immunocompromised animals. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells did not infiltrate into the cornea or suppress the expansion, recruitment, or cytokine production by CD8+ T cells following acute HSV-1 infection.
Conclusions.: Collectively, these findings provide new insight into host defense in the cornea and the pathogenesis of HSV-1 infection by identifying previously unacknowledged MCs as protective innate sentinels for infection of the ocular surface and reinforcing that neutrophils are detrimental to corneal infection.
ARVO Journals
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